The ACCOUNT target is a high performance accounting system for large
local networks. It allows per-IP accounting in whole prefixes of IPv4
addresses with size of up to /8 without the need to add individual
accounting rule for each IP address.
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The ACCOUNT is designed to be queried for data every second or at
least every ten seconds. It is written as kernel module to handle high
bandwidths without packet loss.
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The largest possible subnet size is 24 bit, meaning for example 10.0.0.0/8
network. ACCOUNT uses fixed internal data structures
which speeds up the processing of each packet. Furthermore,
accounting data for one complete 192.168.1.X/24 network takes 4 KB of
memory. Memory for 16-bit or 24-bit networks is only allocated when
needed.
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To optimize the kernel<->userspace data transfer a bit more, the
kernel module only transfers information about IPs, where the src/dst
packet counter is not 0. This saves precious kernel time.
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There is no /proc interface as it would be too slow for continuous access.
The read-and-flush query operation is the fastest, as no internal data
snapshot needs to be created&copied for all data. Use the "read"
operation without flush only for debugging purposes!
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Usage:
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ACCOUNT takes two mandatory parameters:
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\fB\-\-addr\fR \fInetwork\fP\fB/\fP\fInetmask\fR
where \fInetwork\fP\fB/\fP\fInetmask\fP is the subnet to account for, in CIDR syntax
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\fB\-\-tname\fP \fINAME\fP
where \fINAME\fP is the name of the table where the accounting information
should be stored
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The subnet 0.0.0.0/0 is a special case: all data are then stored in the src_bytes
and src_packets structure of slot "0". This is useful if you want
to account the overall traffic to/from your internet provider.
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The data can be queried using the userspace libxt_ACCOUNT_cl library,
and by the reference implementation to show usage of this library,
the \fBiptaccount\fP(8) tool.
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Here is an example of use:
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iptables \-A FORWARD \-j ACCOUNT \-\-addr 0.0.0.0/0 \-\-tname all_outgoing;
iptables \-A FORWARD \-j ACCOUNT \-\-addr 192.168.1.0/24 \-\-tname sales;
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This creates two tables called "all_outgoing" and "sales" which can be
queried using the userspace library/iptaccount tool.
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Note that this target is non-terminating \(em the packet destined to it
will continue traversing the chain in which it has been used.
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Also note that once a table has been defined for specific CIDR address/netmask
block, it can be referenced multiple times using \-j ACCOUNT, provided
that both the original table name and address/netmask block are specified.
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For more information go to https://www.intra2net.com/en/developer/ipt_ACCOUNT/
